Osteoarthritis is a degenerative joint disease that breaks down cartilage
— the natural cushion inside your joints. The result is painful inflammation. If
you have osteoarthritis — the most common type of arthritis — you have plenty of
company. About 20 million Americans have the condition.
Everyone
experiences joint wear and tear, but not everyone develops the painful symptoms
of osteoarthritis. Follow a few basic tips from physical medicine and
rehabilitation (PM&R) physicians, and you can increase your odds of keeping
your joints pain free.
Joint Self-Repair
Catch the
condition when joint pain first begins, and you might be able to halt the
progression of osteoarthritis. The right treatment plan can boost your body’s
natural self-repair process.
Here’s how self-repair works: When you take
a step, your moving body puts pressure on your joints, especially the knees and
hips. Most of the impact, which is equal to about three or four times your body
weight, is absorbed by joint cartilage. Movement first compresses and then
releases the joint, squeezing water and nutrient-rich fluids in and out of the
cartilage. This fluid exchange, which keeps joints lubricated and resilient,
also promotes self-repair.
Enjoying the Benefits of Physical
Activity
The movement that allows your joints to become lubricated
also helps lessen pain. Exercise also improves joint health by helping you shed
excess weight and strengthening muscles.
But if you have joint pain,
exercise may be the last thing you feel like doing. A PM&R physician can
help.
A PM&R physician is a medical doctor who treats
conditions that can cause pain or limit function. Also called physiatrists,
PM&R physicians provide a full spectrum of nonsurgical care to restore
maximum health and quality of life.
For help in overcoming arthritis,
PM&R physicians:
· Are uniquely qualified to prescribe therapeutic exercise; they are trained in exercise physiology, ergonomics and the latest research-based treatments.
· Help patients modify their activities to minimize pain and maximize their ability to do the things they want and need to do.
· Work with a team of health professionals to provide an individualized treatment plan and the tools that enable patients to take control of their health.
· Prescribe medication and provide treatments such as injections to help patients avoid surgery.
· Help achieve a successful recovery when surgery is necessary, by working with patients and their surgeons before and after the surgery.
· Build strength in muscles surrounding the joints.
· Modify the way you do a particular activity through use of gait and ergonomic analysis.
· Change the mechanical properties of your exercise by prescribing appropriate equipment, such as support braces.
Medications and supplements. A PM&R physician can help determine which prescription and non-prescription products are right for you.
· Pain medications. Options include acetaminophen; nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, such as ibuprofen; and, for more severe symptoms, prescription pain medications.
· Corticosteroid injection therapy. Steroids are applied directly to the joint for pain relief.
· Nutritional supplements. Some patients find pain relief with glucosamine and chondroitin sulfate. The benefits of these supplements are still being studied.
Other nonsurgical treatments. A PM&R physician also may prescribe:
· Injections of visco-lubricants to build up cartilage and lubricate joints.
· Heat and cold therapy to provide temporary pain relief.
· Medical acupuncture alongside traditional medicine techniques to provide pain relief.
Adding It All Up
· One out of three American adults suffer from some type of joint disease.
· Gaining 1 pound puts four times more stress on knee and hip joints.
· Although symptoms usually develop years later, osteoarthritis damage can begin as early as age 20 — especially among athletes who overtrain or sustain injuries.
· By age 50, you’ve probably logged 75,000 miles or more on your knees.
Four Keys to Defeating Osteoarthritis Pain
· Stay lean — Sometimes just losing excess weight relieves the pain.
· Stay active — Physically fit people suffer less arthritis pain than people who aren’t active.
· Stay strong — Strong muscles help take the weight load off your joints, limiting cartilage damage. A strong core — abdominal and back muscles — keeps your body stable and balanced.
· Stay informed — See a PM&R physician to learn about the latest advances in nonsurgical treatment options, pain medications and medically supervised exercise programs.